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Orji Kalu Leadership Series Headline Animator

Thursday 4 September 2014

Media must champion change in Nigeria –Kalu

Former governor of Abia State, Dr Orji Uzor Kalu, has urged media prac­titioners in the country to take the lead in cham­pioning the much-needed change in Nigeria. He stated that as critical stake­holders in nation-building, the role of the media could not be relegated to the background.
Dr. Kalu, who made the remarks in Abuja yesterday, during the inaugural con­ference of Association of Communication Scholars and Professionals of Nigeria (ACSPN), urged participants at the event to use some of the things identified as divi­sive agents, for the good of the nation.

Represented by the Man­aging Director of The New Telegraph Newspapers, Mr. Eric Osagie, the former governor emphasised the need for media practitioners to collaborate to move the industry forward. He said practising journalists and those in the classroom must find a meeting point in the best interest of the profes­sion.

He said there was need for an exchange programme between practitioners and teachers suggesting that those who practiced could spend their sabbatical in the classroom, while classroom teachers should do likewise.

“Today, everything has become centrifugal force in Nigeria.” Language di­vides us, religion tears us apart, and culture renders us asunder. Yet, these could be sources of strength and cohe­sion. They could be centripe­tal influences that could help us forge a true nation-state, a land where no man is op­pressed, where there are no fears of ethnic domination or suppression and where peace and justice truly reign.

“There is nothing that says a communication scholar cannot have his sabbatical in a media house, while profes­sionals on the field can also go into classrooms once in a while to add practical flavour to the curriculum.

“I charge the ACSPN to

work out the framework and modalities,” Dr Kalu urged the participants.

He re-echoed a troubling trend that has dominated the country’s educational space for a while now, decrying the instability of graduates of Mass Communication to excel in the profession.

“As an investor and stake­holder in the media indus­try, I have heard it said that students trained in our Mass Communication depart­ments are hardly suitable for the job market.

“Hence, they have to be trained all over, when they get into the field. This is a challenge for the gown. It must produce what the town can use. There must be com­plementarity,” Kalu noted.

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